June 24-27: Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025

Discover great ideas at the 13th-annual edition of this online conference, hosted by MOI Global.

Members enjoy complimentary and exclusive access.

Enjoy the wisdom, insights, and ideas of selected thought leaders:

Lyft: Underappreciated Turnaround With Cash Generation and Growth

Eric DeLamarter and Brandon Carnovale of Half Moon Capital presented Lyft (Nasdaq: LYFT) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Topgolf Callaway: Two-in-One Value Play With Insider Buying and Catalyst

Arvind Mallik and Jonathon Fite of KMF Investments presented Topgolf Callaway (US: MODG) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Build-A-Bear: Misunderstood Retailer, Underappreciated Brand Licensor

Jim and Abigail Zimmerman of Lowell Capital Management presented Build-A-Bear (NYSE: BBW) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Boeing: Why the Ortberg Era Could Mark a Turning Point

Dave Sather of Sather Financial Group presented his in-depth investment thesis on Boeing (NYSE: BA) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Addus HomeCare: Capitalizing on Consolidation in Fragmented Industry

Aman Budhwar of Pender presented his investment thesis on Addus HomeCare (Nasdaq: ADUS) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Allfunds: Durable Growth and Misunderstood Business Model

Julio Utrera of Southeastern Asset Management presented his thesis on Allfunds (Netherlands: ALLFG) at Wide-Moat Investing Summit 2025.

Latticework 2023

In December, MOI Global members — along with a group of leading investors and CEOs — explored intelligent investing in a changing world.

Replay the Sessions

Member-Only Podcasts

We are delighted to launch member-only podcasts, enabling you to listen to exclusive MOI Global audio content in your favorite podcast player.

Access the Podcasts

MOI Global en Español

We are proud to have built an active and engaged Spanish-speaking community of intelligent investors in Spain, Mexico, and beyond.

Visit MOI Global en Español

European Investing Summit 2024

Discover Great Instructors and Great Ideas

The Zurich Project 2025

From June 3-5, a select group of fund managers and founders will come together for the seventh edition of this invitation-only forum in beautiful Switzerland. Investors building firms for the long term share experiences, best practices, and ideas in an intimate private setting, far from the demands of day-to-day business.

The Zurich Project has received acclaim for its unique culture of respect, camaraderie, and honesty.

See a few impressions.

Latticework New York 2025

In October 2025 members will meet at the Yale Club of NYC for the ninth Latticework. The summit has been lauded as a uniquely impactful forum of great minds from the MOI Global community.

Speakers have included Charles de Vaulx, Tom Gayner, Peter Keefe, Bryan Lawrence, Howard Marks, Michael Mauboussin, Mohnish Pabrai, Tom Russo, Guy Spier, Murray Stahl, Will Thorndike, Christopher Tsai, Arnold Van Den Berg, and Ed Wachenheim.

Replay selected past sessions.

Ideaweek St. Moritz 2026

Ideaweek brings together inquisitive minds to explore ideas of consequence in investing, business, and life.

From January 26-29, invited members of the MOI Global community will meet in St. Moritz, Switzerland for a week of skiing, discussion, and friendship. The fifth-annual Ideaweek is a showcase of ideas, a platform for great conversations, and an opportunity to catalyze relationships with like-minded individuals.

Read impressions from a past edition.

Best Ideas Omaha 2026

On May 1, MOI Global members will enjoy a unique opportunity to meet and share ideas during the Berkshire Hathaway weekend.

We look forward to a terrific group of speakers. Past instructors have included Christian Billinger of Billinger Förvaltning, Scott Miller of Greenhaven Road Capital, Bob Robotti of Robotti & Company, Tom Russo of Gardner Russo & Quinn, Dave Sather of Sather Financial Group, Jeffrey Stacey of Stacy Muirhead Capital Management, Will Thomson of Massif Capital, Christopher Tsai of Tsai Capital Corporation, and Elliot Turner of RGA Investment Advisors.

Learn more.

The Frankfurt Conversation 2026

In late 2026, invited members of MOI Global will meet in Frankfurt, Germany, for a day of wisdom and idea sharing.

The Frankfurt Conversation will address selected topics related to intelligent investing in Europe and beyond.

In the past, invited members engaged with European superinvestors Daniel Gladiš, Dr. Hendrik Leber, Guy Spier, and others.

Replay selected past sessions.

Huerta de Soto: Never Invest in a Company Until You Know Its Worth

July 9, 2018 in Featured, Interviews, The Manual of Ideas

We recently had the pleasure of interviewing Juan Huerta de Soto Huarte, investment analyst at Cobas Asset Management, based in Madrid, Spain. Juan has worked with Francisco García Paramés for over five years, both at Bestinver and Cobas. Juan has also worked as an analyst at azValor Asset Management.

The following interview has been translated from Spanish.

MOI Global: Tell us about your educational background and your experience.

Juan Huerta de Soto: When I finished high school, I did not have a clear vocation, so I decided to follow the advice of my family and study Law and Business Administration and Management at the Complutense University of Madrid. It is a long degree program (6 years), but it gave me a little more time to discover what I wanted to do, and it helped me avoid specializing in any particular sector too soon. This turned out to be a very good decision, because initially, I had wanted to study law, and had I done that, I might not have discovered value investing. In my first years at the university, I was more interested in laws and their practical application. However, in my third year, I took an Introduction to Corporate Finance course and since then, my interest has focused on the world of business, finance, and economics.

I owe my discovery of value investing to my family as well. As you can imagine, much of what I am today is due to them. More specifically, my older brother recommended I read One Up on Wall Street, by Peter Lynch, to get me started in the world of investment. Though I was pursuing a degree in business, it was not until I read Lynch’s book that I began to grasp what it meant to invest wisely, and from that point on, my intellectual interest has focused almost entirely on investment and economics. It is curious to note that my brother found that book thanks to the readings recommended by Bestinver Asset Management, a prominent independent asset-management firm in Spain and, at that time, the employer of Francisco García Paramés and his team, with whom I would come to work years later.

When I finished Lynch’s book, I began reading every book I could find about value investing, watching every interview and lecture that featured the Bestinver team (practically the only value management firm in Spain at the time, and by far the largest and most successful), and investing my small savings in Bestinver funds and in Spanish listed companies. My first investments in listed companies awakened my passion for business analysis and ultimately revealed to me a desire to devote myself professionally to financial analysis and investment.

Even so, desires are not everything, and at that time, it was difficult to find work at a value management firm in Spain, mainly due to the shortage of companies with that particular investment philosophy. Therefore, I decided to work toward a master’s degree in applied economics with a focus on the Austrian School of Economics at the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos. Fortune smiled on me, and a junior analyst position opened up at Bestinver just as I was finishing my master’s degree and my internship was drawing to a close. In September 2013, I joined the team of Francisco García Paramés. Almost two years later, the investment team decided to found an independent asset management firm, thus ending a relationship of many years with Bestinver. Fortunately, they decided to count me in on the project, and as soon as I left Bestinver, I joined the rest of the team at azValor Asset Management. These were good years, in which I acquired practical knowledge not found in books, and I was able to develop as an analyst, sharpen the skills I had, and learn new ones. In the end, after nearly two more years, Francisco García Paramés, who had not joined azValor due to contractual impediments, decided to found his own investment firm. I was invited to take part in the project, and I accepted. It has been a year and a half since then, and I hope to keep contributing to this exciting project for the rest of my professional life.

MOI: What are the investment criteria of Cobas Asset Management? How has it evolved over time?

Huerta de Soto: At Cobas we are not dogmatic, but the opposite. We think flexibly, and that enables us to invest whenever a series of basic preconditions are met. When I say that we are not dogmatic, I mean that we do not limit ourselves to a particular investment style, which quite frequently happens nowadays. In other words, we are not one hundred percent deep value, nor do we belong exclusively to the school of Buffett and Munger (quality companies at reasonable prices). Instead, we invest where we think value exists and the market is inefficient. For instance, right now the US stock market is high, as is part of the European market. They are close to their highest levels in the last twenty years, so we have no problem looking for opportunities in other parts of the world, such as in Asia, where a substantial portion of our portfolio is currently invested.

Another good example would be cyclical sectors, especially raw materials. In the past, we have preferred to invest in companies with a clear competitive advantage, a high return on capital, and a certain pricing power; that is, the exact opposite of commodity sectors. However, due to the expansion of credit orchestrated by central banks since the financial crisis of 2008 and to decreases in interest rates to historic lows, holders of the newly created money have sought a decent return, first in fixed income investments, thus causing an unprecedented bubble, and then in certain equity sectors, such as quality and dividend-paying companies.

Consequently, in our opinion, at the present time, good companies, as I have defined them, are quite expensive in general, while certain sectors, such as the maritime transport of raw materials, and oil and gas, among others, are close to their lowest levels in the last ten years. If one knows how to search well and is willing to carry out a comprehensive analysis of such sectors, it is possible to find good companies, with good management teams, little debt, and great potential for appreciation.

With these two examples, I have attempted to illustrate the flexibility that characterizes our investment process. We feel that a good investor must be capable of generating value in any economic context, and not only when the stock market drops and the best companies become affordable. It is necessary to go where a strong discrepancy exists between value and price, and that is what we at Cobas try to do at all times.

As for the basic preconditions we want fulfilled, the most important are the capacity to understand the company (the famous “circle of competence”), clean accounts and a healthy balance sheet, the quality of the management team, and above all, the price. When it comes to the price, one might say we actually are a little dogmatic, since, as a general rule, we are not willing to pay a high price because the company is a particularly good one or because considerable growth is expected. We tend to think that the main risk we face is that of overpaying, which usually occurs when one is overly generous with the initial price and the margin of safety with respect to valuation is not wide enough. Beyond that, if, within the specified criteria, we find a company with barriers to entry and high returns on capital, we always tend to prefer it over another company in the same circumstances but without competitive advantages.

MOI: How do you generate investment ideas?

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Replay:
Latticework 2023

On December 12, MOI Global members gathered at the Yale Club of New York City to explore intelligent investing in a changing world.

Members enjoy complimentary and exclusive access.

MOI Global

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